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[Qemu-devel] Re: [patch uq/master 7/8] MCE: Relay UCR MCE to guest


From: Dean Nelson
Subject: [Qemu-devel] Re: [patch uq/master 7/8] MCE: Relay UCR MCE to guest
Date: Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:10:28 -0500
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.9.1.12) Gecko/20100907 Fedora/3.0.7-1.fc12 Thunderbird/3.0.7

On 10/06/2010 11:05 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
On Wed, Oct 06, 2010 at 10:58:36AM +0900, Hidetoshi Seto wrote:
I got some more question:

(2010/10/05 3:54), Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
Index: qemu/target-i386/cpu.h
===================================================================
--- qemu.orig/target-i386/cpu.h
+++ qemu/target-i386/cpu.h
@@ -250,16 +250,32 @@
  #define PG_ERROR_RSVD_MASK 0x08
  #define PG_ERROR_I_D_MASK  0x10

-#define MCG_CTL_P      (1UL<<8)   /* MCG_CAP register available */
+#define MCG_CTL_P      (1ULL<<8)   /* MCG_CAP register available */
+#define MCG_SER_P      (1ULL<<24) /* MCA recovery/new status bits */

-#define MCE_CAP_DEF    MCG_CTL_P
+#define MCE_CAP_DEF    (MCG_CTL_P|MCG_SER_P)
  #define MCE_BANKS_DEF 10


It seems that current kvm doesn't support SER_P, so injecting SRAO
to guest will mean that guest receives VAL|UC|!PCC and RIPV event
from virtual processor that doesn't have SER_P.

Dean also noted this. I don't think it was deliberate choice to not
expose SER_P. Huang?

In my testing, I found that MCG_SER_P was not being set (and I was
running on a Nehalem-EX system). Injecting a MCE resulted in the
guest entering into panic() from mce_panic(). If crash_kexec()
finds a kexec_crash_image the system ends up rebooting, otherwise,
what happens next requires operator intervention.

When I applied a patch to the guest's kernel which forces mce_ser to be
set, as if MCG_SER_P was set (see __mcheck_cpu_cap_init()), I found
that when the memory page was 'owned' by a guest process, the process
would be killed (if the page was dirty), and the guest would stay
running. The HWPoisoned page would be sidelined and not cause any more
issues.

I think most OSes don't expect that it can receives MCE with !PCC
on traditional x86 processor without SER_P.

Q1: Is it safe to expect that guests can handle such !PCC event?

This might be best answered by Huang, but as I mentioned above, without
MCG_SER_P being set, the result was an orderly system panic on the
guest.

Q2: What is the expected behavior on the guest?

I think I answered this above.

Q3: What happen if guest reboots itself in response to the MCE?

That depends...

And the following issue also holds for a guest that is rebooted at
some point having successfully sidelined the bad page.

After the guest has panic'd, a system_reset of the guest or a restart
initiated by crash_kexec() (called by panic() on the guest), usually
results in the guest hanging because the bad page still belongs
to qemu-kvm and is now being referenced by the new guest in some way.
(It actually may not hang, but successfully reboot and be runnable,
with the bad page lurking in the background. It all seems to depend on
where the bad page ends up, and whether it's ever referenced.)

I believe there was an attempt to deal with this in kvm on the host.
See kvm_handle_bad_page(). This function was suppose to result in the
sending of a BUS_MCEERR_AR flavored SIGBUS by do_sigbus() to qemu-kvm
which in theory would result in the right thing happening. But commit
96054569190bdec375fe824e48ca1f4e3b53dd36 prevents the signal from being
sent. So this mechanism needs to be re-worked, and the issue remains.

I would think that if the the bad page can't be sidelined, such that
the newly booting guest can't use it, then the new guest shouldn't be
allowed to boot. But perhaps there is some merit in letting it try to
boot and see if one gets 'lucky'.

I understand that Huang is looking into what should be done. He can
give you better information than I in answer to your questions.

Dean



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